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$RAVE In the past few days, many people have been spreading a phrase: "The RAVE project team was arrested, so the coin price collapsed." But I'll state the conclusion upfront: as of 2026.4.20, there is no reliable evidence proving that the project team was really arrested. Don't take rumors as facts.
And don't use an unverified statement to justify your chasing high. What truly deserves your attention in this wave of RAVE isn't gossip. It's how it once again demonstrated the most dangerous thing in the crypto world:
Coins with low circulation, high concentration, and emotional pump-and-dump can rise like a myth but crash like a jump from a building. Many only see the tragedy of it falling from a high position.
But what's truly terrifying is that during its rise, so many people never considered: is this increase natural, or is someone pushing it?
Is this price driven by genuine demand, or is it false prosperity?
Is this market cap stable, or will it collapse at the slightest touch?
The most deadly thing in the market isn't a decline.
It's being led to believe "it can still go up."
Once you believe that, the familiar scene unfolds:
Watching others make money, feeling envious. Seeing a surge, not wanting to miss out.
Hearing rumors, starting to imagine scenarios. When it finally crashes, looking everywhere for explanations.
And the most common phrase at the end is: "I knew I shouldn't have touched it."
But the problem is, many pitfalls aren't something you only realize after it crashes.
It's something you should see as wrong while it's still skyrocketing.
This time with RAVE, the bigger doubt in the market isn't really "being arrested."
It's that outside skepticism is growing:
Is the supply too concentrated?
Are the chips controlled by just a few wallets?
Are the large transfers before the surge normal operations, or are they preparing for sell-offs?
These are the real factors that determine your survival or demise.
The most common mistake retail investors make isn't not being able to read K-line charts.
It's only looking at the price, ignoring the structure.
Only watching the increase, ignoring the chips.
Only paying attention to hype, ignoring the risks.
That's why I keep saying:
You're not buying an opportunity.
Many times, what you're actually buying is the risk others are preparing to sell to you.
If this wave truly gives you a warning, it's not "run earlier next time."
It's: next time you encounter such a crazy coin, divine project, or skyrocketing token,
don't ask how much more it can rise.
First, ask yourself three questions:
Is the circulation healthy enough?
Are the chips sufficiently dispersed?
Am I replacing judgment with emotion again?
Many people lose money not because they can't analyze.
It's because every time they see a surge, they automatically lose their boundaries.
Ultimately, the RAVE incident isn't just about a project.
It's another reminder that the market's best trick is to first create FOMO and then harvest those without rules.
I won't comment on whether it will rebound. I only remind you:
The more extreme the market, the less you should judge based on rumors.
What can truly protect you isn't fast news.
It's whether you have boundaries.